Chart Of The Day: Demand, Australia-China Tensions Pushing Iron Ore Higher

 | May 10, 2021 09:37

This morning, iron ore futures in China popped by as much as 3.6%, before closing at a more modest +2.6%. As the world's largest importer of the commodity, as well as, perhaps currently the world's most active builder, Chinese demand is pushing the base metal higher, causing it to flirt with the possibility of a new all-time high.

Meanwhile, in the background, regional trading partners Australia and China could be headed toward not just a trade war but a full fledged cold war. Tensions started back in 2018 when Australia was the first country to publicly ban Chinese behemoth Huawei Technologies from building the land down under's 5G network.

The already strained relationship worsened when Australia requested an investigation into the origins of COVID which was first reported in the city of Wuhan, suggesting China is to blame. Canberra has also stridently condemned Beijing's abusive treatment of the Asian nation's Uighur minority which escaltated tensions yet further. The situation has continued to spiral downhill, with Australia coming out against China's Taiwan reunification rhetoric.

Trade between the two countries has already slumped by 40%. However, China has yet to stop buying Australian iron ore, which is crucial for Chinese infrastructure rebuilding in the wake of the virus. If tensions should worsen, and China decided to shift its purchasing of the industrial metal to another source, expect wild price swings.

The chart is signaling the price of iron ore has more room to run.